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WORKING ELEPHANTS

 elephants for the logging in the forest.


 elephants are used mainly in religious parades
  elephants are widely used on safaris that look for
tigers and rhinos and to take tourists to tourist spots.
 elephants trek - Trekkers usually ride on wooden
platforms that are tied to the backs of the elephants.

MONKEYS

 used to pick and harvest coconuts

BUFFALOS

 buffalos are used to pull carts and ploughs (membajak)

 You probably know that seeing-eye dogs help blind people. But
did you know that hearing dogs help deaf people, alerting
their owners to doorbells, alarms, sirens and people calling
them?

 Specially trained capuchin monkeys can help quadriplegics—


people who can't use their arms or legs. The monkeys can
change CDs, scratch itches, fetch food and even comb hair.

 Homing pigeons, who return to their nests from wherever


they're released, have been used to carry messages for
thousands of years.

 Dogs in K-9 units (the name comes from “canine,” which means
“dog”) help police officers by chasing and holding criminals.
Some are trained to sniff out drugs or explosives or to find
missing people.
 Horses are used to pull wagons, carriages, and carts, they
are also used in armies around the world for mobilization of
equipment and other purposes. Horses are used for
transportation in many rural areas and also to pull loads.
Seeing-eye horses are miniature horses that are trained to
navigate and remember routes to provide assistance for the
visually impaired.

DOGS
 Dog actors 
 Assistance dogs 
 Detector dogs 
 Dogs in warfare 
 Herding dogs 
 Hunting dogs 
 Attack dog
 Bay dog
 Beagle Brigade
 Canine cancer detection
 Courthouse facility dog
 Detection dog
 Drafting dog
 Grief therapy dog
 Guard dog
 Police dog
 Sheep dog
 Sled dog
 Therapy dog

 War elephants 
 Military uses of horses
 There are a lot of similarities between the pairing of dogs and cats with tortoises.
Although a lot of the same principles apply – like letting them get acquainted and take it
from there – I also want to point out a crucial difference.
 Cats are very agile when compared to dogs. They’ll be able to enter a lot of tortoise
enclosures if they want to. This can be very stressful or frightening for a tortoise, even if
your cat is just curious as they usually are.
 So, in general, I would second the dog recommendations, with the addition that you need
to be a lot more careful about keeping your cat out of the tortoise enclosure. This measure
is primarily for the sake of smaller tortoises, but – in some cases – can also protect your
cat.
 We at home have two cats. When they were kittens, they wanted to play with just about
everything and anything that moved! As a result, they were very curious about our
tortoises-they went closer to sniff them, touched their shells and even tried to push them
around a little bit.
 Luckily, this was always under supervision and the tortoises were already growing up.
Now that our cats are older and our tortoises are bigger, they are used to each other and
for the most part they simply ignore each other. Sometimes a cat enjoys observing them
as they feed but that’s where it stops.

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